new year

Friday, January 8, 2016

If you visit the prisons in a democratic country, you will
mostly find poor people lodged there. Does this mean that rich and powerful
people in democracy don’t commit crimes. As far I know some of the biggest and most
heinous crimes are
committed by the rich and powerful but somehow the law is such that they
escape punishment.

Poor people are sometimes picked up on suspicion for criminal acts by
the police and since they have no money to fight the case or get bail they are
sent to prisons for an indeterminate period and their case don’t even come in the court for a hearing. Sometimes
innocent people are sent to prisons by the lower court and such people don’t have the
money to go on appeal in a higher court.

At the same time people with money and power engage the best
lawyers who find loopholes in the law and escape punishment. Here is an example
in the Indian context.

A well know actor in India drove a car without license and in an
inebriated condition on the foot path and killed a poor man sleeping there and seriously injured several others.

This actor dragged the case for thirteen long years or shall
we say the court allowed him to drag the
case for this long period and one witness died in the meanwhile. Finally, this
man was convicted for five years in prison. He went on an appeal and the higher
court acquitted him for want of proof.

The guardian reports as follows.

Quote.

One of Bollywood’s biggest stars has been cleared on appeal of killing a
homeless man in a drunken hit-and-run, a decision likely to revive
questions about how India’s justice system treats the rich and famous.Actor Salman Khan’s Toyota Land Cruiser veered off a main road in Mumbai
into a group of people sleeping rough outside a bakery in 2002, killing
labourer Nurulah Mahbob Sharif and injuring four others.A Mumbai court found Khan, 49,
guilty of culpable homicide earlier this year, saying he was drunk behind
the wheel when the accident happened and tried to flee the scene.That ruling has now been overturned by the Bombay high court. The judge
ruled that statements from the state’s star witness – a bodyguard who died of
tuberculosis in 2007 – were not “wholly reliable”, and the prosecution had
failed to conclusively establish that Khan was drunk.“The prosecution failed to establish its case on all charges,” Justice A R
Joshi told a packed courtroom, announcing that Khan had been acquitted.His defence team had argued that Khan’s driver was in charge of the car, not
the actor, and lost control when a tyre burst. The star had been drinking water
all evening and only climbed out of the driver’s seat after the accident
because the passenger door was damaged, lawyers said.Unquote.The actor’s car killed the poor man and seriously injured four others. What
about justice for them and their families?

Can any one drive a car without license and in a drunken state?Did this actor have a driverless car which drove on its own fully drunk?

This actor who was acquitted is not a first time offender. He was previously
jailed for nearly a week for hunting endangered
gazelles, and is on bail in a separate case over killing protected
antelopes. A former partner, actor and Miss World winner Aishwarya Rai, also
claimed that he harassed her
after their split.

What is your opinion about the justice system in a democratic country? Don't you think it is heavily tilted against the poor?

About Me

Hi, my name is Joseph Thomas Pulikotil. I hope you will find my blog interesting, informative and thought provoking.Please feel free to post your comments, opinions, appreciation,improvements, suggestions or whatever you feel. I will surely visit your blog and we will be good friends.